To Meadows
Robert Herrick
Ye have been fresh and green, Ye have been fill'd with flowers; And ye the walks have been Where maids have spent their hours. You have beheld how they With wicker arks did come, To kiss and bear away The richer cowslips home. You've heard them sweetly sing, And seen them in a round; Each virgin, like a spring, With honeysuckles crown'd. But now, we see none here, Whose silvery feet did tread And with dishevell'd hair Adorn'd this smoother mead. Like unthrifts, having spent Your stock, and needy grown You're left here to lament Your poor estates alone.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert Herrick : To Mistress Katharine Bradshaw, The Lovely,
- Robert Herrick : To Mistress Katharine Bradshaw, The Lovely, That Crowned Him With Laurel
- Robert Herrick : To Music
- Robert Herrick : To Music, To Becalm A Sweet Sick Youth
- Robert Herrick : To Music, To Becalm His Fever
- Robert Herrick : To Music: A Song
- Robert Herrick : To Oenone
- Robert Herrick : To Pansies
- Robert Herrick : To Perenna
- Robert Herrick : To Perilla
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert Herrick : To Live Merrily, And To Trust To Good Verses
- Robert Herrick : To Live Merrily,
- Robert Herrick : To Live Freely
- Robert Herrick : To Laurels
- Robert Herrick : To Julia, The Flaminica Dialis Or Queen-priest
- Robert Herrick : To Julia In The Temple
- Robert Herrick : To Julia ( The Saints'-bell Calls, And, Julia, I Must Read )
- Robert Herrick : To Julia ( Permit Me, Julia, Now To Go Away )
- Robert Herrick : To Julia ( Julia, When Thy Herrick Dies )
- Robert Herrick : To Julia ( How Rich And Pleasing Thou, My Julia, Art )